Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
disciplines: - Shock physics, - Phase transition mechanisms, - Materials science. They must also be proficient in one or more of the following techniques: - X-ray diffraction, - Velocimetry, - Thermomechanical
-
Postdoctoral researcher (M/F), synthesis of crystal phase heterostructures by Molecular Beam Epitaxy
outcomes. Molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) growth of GaAs nanowires on patterned Si/SiO₂ substrates. Structural analysis by electron microscopy (in situ TEM, electron diffraction, zone-axis indexing). Automated
-
synthesised in situ using a state-of-the-art pulsed laser deposition system. Key characterisations include X-ray diffraction for structural properties and temperature-dependent magneto-optical properties
-
theoretical models and numerical tools (master equations, quantum trajectory simulations) to investigate coupling regimes, dynamical phase transitions, and the effects of collective dissipation on coherence and
-
supergravity solutions dual to strongly coupled gauge theories in 4 dimensions. The other is to construct new coherent truncations in which to determine new solutions of interest for AdS/CFT duality. 1) Use and
-
platforms (nano-XRF imaging, aging test benches, X-ray microtomography, etc.). Where to apply Website https://emploi.cnrs.fr/Candidat/Offre/UMR5129-MARCLO-108/Candidater.aspx Requirements Research
-
characterization of C and SiC fibers - Training on bench use (in particular heating techniques by Joule effect, laser diffraction, infrared imaging, pyrometry, preparation of micrometric samples, ...) - Technical
-
be studied by cryo-electron tomography and single-molecule fluorescence microscopy. The "Mechanism of chromatin patterning" team is an international and interdisciplinary team belonging to the MCD unit
-
of axion production in dense media, with a particular emphasis on gamma-ray signatures, gravitational waves, and multi-messenger observables. Qualifications: Applicants should have: a PhD in physics or
-
the perspective of fundamental properties, where the dimensions of an object become as small as certain characteristic distances (coherence length, mean free path, etc.). The third area extends the concept of "soft